- Source: Glucuronide
A glucuronide, also known as glucuronoside, is any substance produced by linking glucuronic acid to another substance via a glycosidic bond. The glucuronides belong to the glycosides.
Glucuronidation, the conversion of chemical compounds to glucuronides, is a method that animals use to assist in the excretion of toxic substances, drugs or other substances that cannot be used as an energy source. Glucuronic acid is attached via a glycosidic bond to the substance, and the resulting glucuronide, which has a much higher water solubility than the original substance, is eventually excreted by the kidneys.
Enzymes that cleave the glycosidic bond of a glucuronide are called glucuronidases.
Examples
Miquelianin (Quercetin 3-O-glucuronide)
Morphine-6-glucuronide
Scutellarein-7-glucuronide
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Penisilin
- Bangun-bangun
- Aglikon
- Efavirenz
- Psilosibin
- Kimia forensik
- Transporter anion organik
- Glucuronide
- Ethyl glucuronide
- Bilirubin glucuronide
- Quercetin glucuronide
- Bromazolam
- Androstanediol glucuronide
- Estrogen conjugate
- Morphine-6-glucuronide
- Sulfamethoxazole
- Bilirubin diglucuronide